I am reading a CSV file using Perl 5.26.1 with lines that look like this:
B1_10,202337840166,R08C02,202337840166_R08C02.gtc
I'm reading this data into a hash that has the last element as a key, and the first as a value.
I read the file line by line (snippet only):
while (<$csv>) {
if (/^Sample/) { next }
say "-----start----\noriginal = $_";
chomp;
my #line = split /,/;
my $name = $line[0];
my $vcf = $line[3];
say "1st element = $name";
say "4th element = $vcf";
$vcf2dir{$vcf} = $name;
say "\$vcf2dir{$vcf} = '$name'";
say '-----end------';
}
which produces the following output:
-----start----
original = B1_10,202337840166,R08C02,202337840166_R08C02.gtc
1st element = B1_10
4th element = 202337840166_R08C02.gtc
} = 'B1_10'2337840166_R08C02.gtc
-----end-------
but it should look like
-----start----
original = B1_10,202337840166,R08C02,202337840166_R08C02.gtc
1st element = B1_10
4th element = 202337840166_R08C02.gtc
$vcf2dir{202337840166_R08C02.gtc} = 'B1_10'
-----end-------
and it shows strangely with the data printer package:
use DDP;
p %vcf2dir;
produces
{
' "B1_10"840166_R08C02.gtc
}
in other words, the last string is being cut up for some reason.
I have tried removing non-ascii characters with $_ =~ s/[[:^ascii:]]//g; but this still produces the same error.
I have no idea why Perl is ripping these strings apart :(
while (<$csv>) {
...
chomp;
My guess is that the input file has as line end \r\n (windows style) while you are executing the code in a UNIX like environment (Linux, Mac...) where the line end is \n. This means that $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR is also \n and that chomp only removes the \n and leaves the \r. This left \r causes such strange output.
To fix this either fix the line endings in your input file, set $INPUT_RECORD_SEPARATOR to the expected separator or just do s{\r?\n\z}{} instead of chomp to handle both \r\n and \n line endings.
I ran your snippet against your line and it worked as expected
But I have had behavior like what you show because a spurious Control-M's in my data.
Try filtering for control-M's
after your chomp replace all control-M's with the command below
s/\cM//g;
Two Perl scripts, using different input record separators, work together to convert a LaTeX file into something easily searched for human-readable phrases and sentences. Of course, they could be wrapped together by a single shell script. But I am curious whether they can be incorporated into a single Perl script.
The reason for these scripts: It would be a hassle to find "two three" inside short.tex, for instance. But after conversion, grep 'two three' will return the first paragraph.
For any LaTeX file (here, short.tex), the scripts are invoked as follows.
cat short.tex | try1.pl | try2.pl
try1.pl works on paragraphs. It gets rid of LaTeX comments. It makes sure that each word is separated from its neighbors by a single space, so that no sneaky tabs, form feeds, etc., lurk between words. The resulting paragraph occupies a single line, consisting of visible characters separated by single spaces --- and at the end, a sequence of at least two newlines.
try2.pl slurps the entire file. It makes sure that paragraphs are separated from each other by exactly two newlines. And it ensures that the last line of the file is non-trivial, containing visible character(s).
Can one elegantly concatenate two operations such as these, which depend on different input record separators, into a single Perl script, say big.pl? For instance, could the work of try1.pl and try2.pl be accomplished by two functions or bracketed segments inside the larger script?
Incidentally, is there a Stack Overflow keyword for "input record separator"?
###File try1.pl:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use 5.18.2;
local $/ = ""; # input record separator: loop through one paragraph at a time. position marker $ comes only at end of paragraph.
while (<>) {
s/[\x25].*\n/ /g; # remove all LaTeX comments. They start with %
s/[\t\f\r ]+/ /g; # collapse each "run" of whitespace to one single space
s/^\s*\n/\n/g; # any line that looks blank is converted to a pure newline;
s/(.)\n/$1/g; # Any line that does not look blank is joined to the subsequent line
print;
print "\n\n"; # make sure each paragraph is separated from its fellows by newlines
}
###File try2.pl:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use strict;
use warnings;
use 5.18.2;
local $/ = undef; # input record separator: entire text or file is a single record.
while (<>) {
s/[\n][\n]+/\n\n/g; # exactly 2 blank lines separate paragraphs. Like cat -s
s/[\n]+$/\n/; # last line is nontrivial; no blank line at the end
print;
}
###File short.tex:
\paragraph{One}
% comment
two % also 2
three % or 3
% comment
% comment
% comment
% comment
% comment
% comment
So they said%
that they had done it.
% comment
% comment
% comment
Fleas.
% comment
% comment
After conversion:
\paragraph{One} two three
So they said that they had done it.
Fleas.
To combine try1.pl and try2.pl into a single script you could try:
local $/ = "";
my #lines;
while (<>) {
[...] # Same code as in try1.pl except print statements
push #lines, $_;
}
$lines[-1] =~ s/\n+$/\n/;
print for #lines;
A pipe connects the output of one process to the input of another process. Neither one knows about the other nor cares how it operates.
But, putting things together like this breaks the Unix pipeline philosophy of small tools that each excel at a very narrow job. Should you link these two things, you'll always have to do both tasks even if you want one (although you could get into configuration to turn off one, but that's a lot of work).
I process a lot of LaTeX, and I control everything through a Makefile. I don't really care about what the commands look like and I don't even have to remember what they are:
short-clean.tex: short.tex
cat short.tex | try1.pl | try2.pl > $#
Let's do it anyways
I'll limit myself to the constraint of basic concatenation instead of complete rewriting or rearranging, most because there are some interesting things to show.
Consider what happens should you concatenate those two programs by simply adding the text of the second program at the end of the text of the first program.
The output from the original first program still goes to standard output and the second program now doesn't get that output as input.
The input to the program is likely exhausted by the original first program and the second program now has nothing to read. That's fine because it would have read the unprocessed input to the first program.
There are various ways to fix this, but none of them make much sense when you already have two working program that do their job. I'd shove that in the Makefile and forget about it.
But, suppose you do want it all in one file.
Rewrite the first section to send its output to a filehandle connected to a string. It's output is now in the programs memory. This basically uses the same interface, and you can even use select to make that the default filehandle.
Rewrite the second section to read from a filehandle connected to that string.
Alternately, you can do the same thing by writing to a temporary file in the first part, then reading that temporary file in the second part.
A much more sophisticated program would the first program write to a pipe (inside the program) that the second program is simultaneously reading. However, you have to pretty much rewrite everything so the two programs are happening simultaneously.
Here's Program 1, which uppercases most of the letters:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
$|++;
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
and here's Program 2, which collapses whitespace:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
$|++;
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\s+/ /gr;
}
They work serially to get the job done:
$ perl program1.pl
The quick brown dog jumped over the lazy fox.
THE QUICK BROWN DOG JUMPED OVER THE LAZY FOX.
^D
$ perl program2.pl
The quick brown dog jumped over the lazy fox.
The quick brown dog jumped over the lazy fox.
^D
$ perl program1.pl | perl program2.pl
The quick brown dog jumped over the lazy fox.
THE QUICK BROWN DOG JUMPED OVER THE LAZY FOX.
^D
Now I want to combine those. First, I'll make some changes that don't affect the operation but will make it easier for me later. Instead of using implicit filehandles, I'll make those explicit and one level removed from the actual filehandles:
Program 1:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
$|++;
my $output_fh = \*STDOUT;
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print { $output_fh } tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
Program 2:
#!/usr/bin/perl
$|++;
my $input_fh = \*STDIN;
while( <$input_fh> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\s+/ /gr;
}
Now I have the chance to change what those filehandles are without disturbing the meat of the program. The while doesn't know or care what that filehandle is, so let's start by writing to a file in Program 1 and reading from that same file in Program 2:
Program 1:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
open my $output_fh, '>', 'program1.out' or die "$!";
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print { $output_fh } tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
close $output_fh;
Program 2:
#!/usr/bin/perl
$|++;
open my $input_fh, '<', 'program1.out' or die "$!";
while( <$input_fh> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\h+/ /gr;
}
However, you can no longer run these in a pipeline because Program 1 doesn't use standard output and Program 2 doesn't read standard input:
% perl program1.pl
% perl program2.pl
You can, however, now join the programs, shebang and all:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
open my $output_fh, '>', 'program1.out' or die "$!";
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print { $output_fh } tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
close $output_fh;
#!/usr/bin/perl
$|++;
open my $input_fh, '<', 'program1.out' or die "$!";
while( <$input_fh> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\h+/ /gr;
}
You can skip the file and use a string instead, but at this point, you've gone beyond merely concatenating files and need a little coordination for them to share the scalar with the data. Still, the meat of the program doesn't care how you made those filehandles:
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
my $output_string;
open my $output_fh, '>', \ $output_string or die "$!";
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print { $output_fh } tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
close $output_fh;
#!/usr/bin/perl
$|++;
open my $input_fh, '<', \ $output_string or die "$!";
while( <$input_fh> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\h+/ /gr;
}
So let's go one step further and do what the shell was already doing for us.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use v5.26;
pipe my $input_fh, my $output_fh;
$output_fh->autoflush(1);
while( <<>> ) { # safer line input operator
print { $output_fh } tr/a-z/A-Z/r;
}
close $output_fh;
while( <$input_fh> ) { # safer line input operator
print s/\h+/ /gr;
}
From here, it gets a bit tricky and I'm not going to go to the next step with polling filehandles so one thing can write and the the next thing reads. There are plenty of things that do that for you. And, you're now doing a lot of work to avoid something that was already simple and working.
Instead of all that pipe nonsense, the next step is to separate code into functions (likely in a library), and deal with those chunks of code as named things that hide their details:
use Local::Util qw(remove_comments minify);
while( <<>> ) {
my $result = remove_comments($_);
$result = minify( $result );
...
}
That can get even fancier where you simply go through a series of steps without knowing what they are or how many of them there will be. And, since all the baby steps are separate and independent, you're basically back to the pipeline notion:
use Local::Util qw(get_input remove_comments minify);
my $result;
my #steps = qw(get_input remove_comments minify)
while( ! eof() ) { # or whatever
no strict 'refs'
$result = &{$_}( $result ) for #steps;
}
A better way makes that an object so you can skip the soft reference:
use Local::Processor;
my #steps = qw(get_input remove_comments minify);
my $processer = Local::Processor->new( #steps );
my $result;
while( ! eof() ) { # or whatever
$result = $processor->$_($result) for #steps;
}
Like I did before, the meat of the program doesn't care or know about the steps ahead of time. That means that you can move the sequence of steps to configuration and use the same program for any combination and sequence:
use Local::Config;
use Local::Processor;
my #steps = Local::Config->new->get_steps;
my $processer = Local::Processor->new;
my $result;
while( ! eof() ) { # or whatever
$result = $processor->$_($result) for #steps;
}
I write quite a bit about this sort of stuff in Mastering Perl and Effective Perl Programming. But, because you can do it doesn't mean you should. This reinvents a lot that make can already do for you. I don't do this sort of thing without good reason—bash and make have to be pretty annoying to motivate me to go this far.
The motivating problem was to generate a "cleaned" version of a LaTeX file, which would be easy to search, using regex, for complex phrases or sentences.
The following single Perl script does the job, whereas previously I required one shell script and two Perl scripts, entailing three invocations of Perl. This new, single script incorporates three consecutive loops, each with a different input record separator.
First loop:
input = STDIN, or a file passed as argument; record separator=default, loop by line; print result to fileafterperlLIN, a temporary
file on the hard drive.
Second loop:
input = fileafterperlLIN;
record separator = "", loop by paragraph;
print result to fileafterperlPRG, a temporary file on the hard drive.
Third loop:
input = fileafterperlPRG;
record separator = undef, slurp entire file
print result to STDOUT
This has the disadvantage of printing to and reading from two files on the hard drive, which may slow it down. Advantages are that the operation seems to require only one process; and all the code resides in a single file, which should make it easier to maintain.
#!/usr/bin/perl
# 2019v04v05vFriv17h18m41s
use strict;
use warnings;
use 5.18.2;
my $diagnose;
my $diagnosticstring;
my $exitcode;
my $userName = $ENV{'LOGNAME'};
my $scriptpath;
my $scriptname;
my $scriptdirectory;
my $cdld;
my $fileafterperlLIN;
my $fileafterperlPRG;
my $handlefileafterperlLIN;
my $handlefileafterperlPRG;
my $encoding;
my $count;
sub diagnosticmessage {
return unless ( $diagnose );
print STDERR "$scriptname: ";
foreach $diagnosticstring (#_) {
printf STDERR "$diagnosticstring\n";
}
}
# Routine setup
$scriptpath = $0;
$scriptname = $scriptpath;
$scriptname =~ s|.*\x2f([^\x2f]+)$|$1|;
$cdld = "$ENV{'cdld'}"; # A directory to hold temporary files used by scripts
$exitcode = system("test -d $cdld && test -w $cdld || { printf '%\n' 'cdld not a writeable directory'; exit 1; }");
die "$scriptname: system returned exitcode=$exitcode: bail\n" unless $exitcode == 0;
$scriptdirectory = "$cdld/$scriptname"; # To hold temporary files used by this script
$exitcode = system("test -d $scriptdirectory || mkdir $scriptdirectory");
die "$scriptname: system returned exitcode=$exitcode: bail\n" unless $exitcode == 0;
diagnosticmessage ( "scriptdirectory=$scriptdirectory" );
$exitcode = system("test -w $scriptdirectory && test -x $scriptdirectory || exit 1;");
die "$scriptname: system returned exitcode=$exitcode: $scriptdirectory not writeable or not executable. bail\n" unless $exitcode == 0;
$fileafterperlLIN = "$scriptdirectory/afterperlLIN.tex";
diagnosticmessage ( "fileafterperlLIN=$fileafterperlLIN" );
$exitcode = system("printf '' > $fileafterperlLIN;");
die "$scriptname: system returned exitcode=$exitcode: bail\n" unless $exitcode == 0;
$fileafterperlPRG = "$scriptdirectory/afterperlPRG.tex";
diagnosticmessage ( "fileafterperlPRG=$fileafterperlPRG" );
$exitcode=system("printf '' > $fileafterperlPRG;");
die "$scriptname: system returned exitcode=$exitcode: bail\n" unless $exitcode == 0;
# This script's job: starting with a LaTeX file, which may compile beautifully in pdflatex but be difficult
# to read visually or search automatically,
# (1) convert any line that looks blank --- a "trivial line", containing only whitespace --- to a pure newline. This is because
# (a) LaTeX interprets any whitespace line following a non-blank or "nontrivial" line as end of paragraph, whereas
# (b) Perl needs two consecutive newlines to signal end of paragraph.
# (2) remove all LaTeX comments;
# (3) deal with the \unskip LaTeX construct, etc.
# The result will be
# (4) each LaTeX paragraph will occupy a unique line
# (5) exactly one pair of newlines --- visually, one blank line --- will divide each pair of consecutive paragraphs
# (6) first paragraph will be on first line (no opening blank line) and last paragraph will be on last line (no ending blank line)
# (7) whitespace in output will consist of only
# (a) a single space between readable strings, or
# (b) double newline between paragraphs
#
$handlefileafterperlLIN = undef;
$handlefileafterperlPRG = undef;
$encoding = ":encoding(UTF-8)";
diagnosticmessage ( "fileafterperlLIN=$fileafterperlLIN" );
open($handlefileafterperlLIN, ">> $encoding", $fileafterperlLIN) || die "$0: can't open $fileafterperlLIN for appending: $!";
# Loop 1 / line:
# Default input record separator: loop through one line at a time, delimited by \n
$count = 0;
while (<>) {
$count = $count + 1;
diagnosticmessage ( "line $count" );
s/^\s*\n/\n/mg; # Convert any trivial line to a pure newline.
print $handlefileafterperlLIN $_;
}
close($handlefileafterperlLIN);
open($handlefileafterperlLIN, "< $encoding", $fileafterperlLIN) || die "$0: can't open $fileafterperlLIN for reading: $!";
open($handlefileafterperlPRG, ">> $encoding", $fileafterperlPRG) || die "$0: can't open $fileafterperlPRG for appending: $!";
# Loop PRG / paragraph:
local $/ = ""; # Input record separator: loop through one paragraph at a time. position marker $ comes only at end of paragraph.
$count = 0;
while (<$handlefileafterperlLIN>) {
$count = $count + 1;
diagnosticmessage ( "paragraph $count" );
s/(?<!\x5c)[\x25].*\n/ /g; # Remove all LaTeX comments.
# They start with % not \% and extend to end of line or newline character. Join to next line.
# s/(?<!\x5c)([\x24])/\x2a/g; # 2019v04v01vMonv13h44m09s any $ not preceded by backslash \, replace $ by * or something.
# This would be only if we are going to run detex on the output.
s/(.)\n/$1 /g; # Any line that has something other than newline, and then a newline, is joined to the subsequent line
s|([^\x2d])\s*(\x2d\x2d\x2d)([^\x2d])|$1 $2$3|g; # consistent treatment of triple hyphen as em dash
s|([^\x2d])(\x2d\x2d\x2d)\s*([^\x2d])|$1$2 $3|g; # consistent treatment of triple hyphen as em dash, continued
s/[\x0b\x09\x0c\x20]+/ /gm; # collapse each "run" of whitespace other than newline, to a single space.
s/\s*[\x5c]unskip(\x7b\x7d)?\s*(\S)/$2/g; # LaTeX whitespace-collapse across newlines
s/^\s*//; # Any nontrivial line: No indenting. No whitespace in first column.
print $handlefileafterperlPRG $_;
print $handlefileafterperlPRG "\n\n"; # make sure each paragraph ends with 2 newlines, hence at least 1 blank line.
}
close($handlefileafterperlPRG);
open($handlefileafterperlPRG, "< $encoding", $fileafterperlPRG) || die "$0: can't open $fileafterperlPRG for reading: $!";
# Loop slurp
local $/ = undef; # Input record separator: entire file is a single record.
$count = 0;
while (<$handlefileafterperlPRG>) {
$count = $count + 1;
diagnosticmessage ( "slurp $count" );
s/[\n][\n]+/\n\n/g; # Exactly 2 blank lines (newlines) separate paragraphs. Like cat -s
s/[\n]+$/\n/; # Last line is visible or "nontrivial"; no trivial (blank) line at the end
s/^[\n]+//; # No trivial (blank) line at the start. The first line is "nontrivial."
print STDOUT;
}
I'm very new to Perl. I'm currently going through this Perl file and I've got this variable where I was able to format it down to get all the text after the "<" symbol using this line I found from another stackflow question.
($tempVariable) = $Line =~ /(\<.*)\s*$/;
So currently whenever I print this variable, I get the output
$tempVariable = <some text here #typeOf and more text here after
I need to get everything between the "<" symbol and the "#"symbol.
I tried looking at other stackflow questions and tried implementing it to mines but I keep getting errors so if anybody could help me out I would appreciate it.
my ($substr) = $str =~ /<([^<\#]*)\#/
or die "No match";
You'll need a regex that
looks for the starting < character
then (your question is unclear on this point)
captures one-or-more non-# characters, or
captures zero-or-more non-# characters
looks for the trailing # character
also not specified in your question: do you need to strip leading and trailing white space from the match?
I.e.
#!/usr/bin/perl
use warnings;
use strict;
my $Line = '<some text here #typeOf and more text here after';
my $tempVariable;
# alternative 1: one-or-more characters
($tempVariable) = $Line =~ /<([^#]+)#/
or die "No match alternative 1";
print "Alternative 1: '${tempVariable}'\n";
# alternative 2: zero-or-more characters
($tempVariable) = $Line =~ /<([^#]*)#/
or die "No match alternative 2";
print "Alternative 2: '${tempVariable}'\n";
exit 0;
Test run (white space is not stripped):
$ perl dummy.pl
Alternative 1: 'some text here '
Alternative 2: 'some text here '
I am an absolute beginner in perl and I am trying to extract lines of text between 2 strings on different lines but without success. It looks like I`m missing something in my code. The code should print out the file name and the found strings. Do you have any idea where could be the problem ? Many thanks indeed for your help or advice. Here is the example:
*****************
example:
START
new line 1
new line 2
new line 3
END
*****************
and my script:
use strict;
use warnings;
my $command0 = "";
opendir (DIR, "C:/Users/input/") or die "$!";
my #files = readdir DIR;
close DIR;
splice (#files,0,2);
open(MYOUTFILE, ">>output/output.txt");
foreach my $file (#files) {
open (CHECKBOOK, "input/$file")|| die "$!";
while ($record = <CHECKBOOK>) {
if (/\bstart\..\/bend\b/) {
print MYOUTFILE "$file;$_\n";
}
}
close(CHECKBOOK);
$command0 = "";
}
close(MYOUTFILE);
I suppose that you are trying to use a flip-flop here, which might work well for your input, but you've written it wrong:
if (/\bstart\..\/bend\b/) {
A flip-flop (the range operator) uses two statements, separated by either .. or .... What you want is two regexes joined with ..:
if (/\bSTART\b/ .. /\bEND\b/)
Of course, you also want to match the case (upper), or use the /i modifier to ignore case. You might even want to use beginning of line anchor ^ to only match at the beginning of a line, e.g.:
if (/^START\b/ .. /^END\b/)
You should also know that your entire program can be replaced with a one-liner, such as
perl -ne 'print if /^START\b/ .. /^END\b/' input/*
Alas, this only works for linux. The cmd shell in Windows does not glob, so you must do that manually:
perl -ne "BEGIN { #ARGV = map glob, #ARGV }; print if /^START\b/ .. /^END\b/" input/*
If you are having troubles with the whole file printing no matter what you do, I think the problem lies with your input file. So take a moment to study it and make sure it is what you think it is, for example:
perl -MData::Dumper -e"$Data::Dumper::Useqq = 1; print Dumper $_;" file.txt
If you're matching a multi-line string, you might need to tell the regexp about it:
if (/\bstart\..\/bend\b/s) {
note the s after the regex.
Perldoc says:
s
Treat string as single line. That is, change "." to match any
character whatsoever, even a newline, which normally it would not
match.
I have a few lines of text that I'm trying to use Perl's split function to convert into an array. The problem is that I'm getting some unusual extra characters in the output, specifically the following string "\cM" (without the quotes). This string appears where there were line breaks in the original text; however, (I believe) those line breaks were removed in the text that I'm trying to split. Does anybody know what's going on with this phenomenon? I posted an example below. Thanks.
Here's the original plain text that I'm trying to split. I'm loading it from a file, in case that matters:
10b2obo12b2o2b$6b3obob3o8bob3o2b$2bobo10bo3b2obo4bo2b$2o4b2o5bo3b4obo
3b2o2b$2bob2o2bo4b3obo5b4obob$8bo4bo13b3o$2bob2o2bo4b3obo5b4obob$2o4b
2o5bo3b4obo3b2o2b$2bobo10bo3b2obo4bo2b$6b3obob3o8bob3o2b$10b2obo12b2o!
Here is my Perl code that is supposed to do the splitting:
while(<$FH>) {
chomp;
$string .= $_;
last if m/!$/;
}
#rows = split(qr/\$/, $string);
print; # a dummy line to provide a breakpoint for the debugger
This what the debugger outputs when it gets to the "print" line. The issue I'm trying to deal with appears in lines 3, 7, and 10:
DB<10> p $string
2o5bo3b4obo3b2o2b$2bobo10bo3b2obo4bo2b$6b3obob3o8bob3o2b$10b2obo12b2o!
DB<11> x #rows
0 '10b2obo12b2o2b'
1 '6b3obob3o8bob3o2b'
2 '2bobo10bo3b2obo4bo2b'
3 "2o4b2o5bo3b4obo\cM3b2o2b"
4 '2bob2o2bo4b3obo5b4obob'
5 '8bo4bo13b3o'
6 '2bob2o2bo4b3obo5b4obob'
7 "2o4b\cM2o5bo3b4obo3b2o2b"
8 '2bobo10bo3b2obo4bo2b'
9 '6b3obob3o8bob3o2b'
10 "10b2obo12b2o!\cM"
You know, changing the file input separator would make this code a lot simpler.
$/ = '$';
my #rows = <$FH>;
chomp #rows;
print "#rows";
The debugger is probably using \cM to represent Ctrl-M which is also known as a carriage return (and sometimes \r or ^M). Text files from Windows use a CR-LF (carriage return, line feed) pair to represent the end of a line. If you read such a file on a Unix system, your chomp will strip off the Unix EOL (a single line feed) but leave the CR as is and you end up with stray CRs in your file.
For a file like you have you can just strip out all the trailing whitespace instead of using chomp:
while(defined(my $line = <$FH>)) {
$line =~ s/\s+$//;
$string .= $line;
last if($line =~ /!$/);
}
You don't say which OS you're on.
Check out binmode and what it has to say about \cM, and that their position coincides with the line endings of your input file:
http://perldoc.perl.org/functions/binmode.html